Trunk Spotlight: Dolphin for iPad Integrates the Evernote Web Clipper

Dolphin, the popular mobile browser, recently released a new version for iPad that integrates Evernote’s Web Clipper technology. This means, for the first time, you can seamlessly clip web pages to Evernote from your iPad, and get the same quality experience as when you use the Evernote Web Clipper on desktop browsers. Add that to Dolphin’s other features, such as tabbed browsing, bookmarks, and customizable gesture-based navigation, and you have a great browsing experience on your iPad.

Clip on the Go

Whether waiting for your plane at the airport or sitting in a coffee shop, you can look up whatever is on your mind, and clip it to Evernote to reference later. Anything from travel information to discounts you discover to information for a research project can be clipped, and Dolphin will format it properly in Evernote where it will be searchable and accessible. Just as with the Evernote Web Clipper, you can specify the destination notebook, and add tags or comments. Additionally, taking advantage of the iPad’s touchscreen, you can annotate your Web Clips to note anything you don’t want to forget.

Working Closely Together

This is the first time a partner has integrated Evernote’s Web Clipper technology to provide the best clipping experience on iPad. Previously, Dolphin had an Evernote plugin available only on Android, but Dolphin heard from the Evernote community that they wanted the full Evernote Web Clipper experience on iPad. “We listened to their feedback, and worked closely with Evernote’s Dev Team to make it happen, and we are very happy with the result,” said Edith Yeung, Head of Corporate Strategy at Dolphin. Working together with our partners to create the features and experiences that our users really want is the kind of integration we strive for, and the Dolphin Browser for iPad is a great example.

Enter Our Swag Giveaway!

To celebrate the integration, we’re giving away two gift packs that include Evernote and Dolphin t-shirts, a Dolphin notebook, and Evernote stickers. We’ll randomly select one person from our community of beta testers who helped polish the integration, and one from those who comment on this blog post. For a chance to win on the blog, please leave a comment by noon February 15th, with the hashtag #Dolphin, and let us know why you like Dolphin.

Are you a developer interested in joining the more than 20,000 developers worldwide who are building with Evernote? Visit dev.evernote.com to get more information and get started!

Use #dolphin on ipad, galaxy s3, and my PC (chrome extension) and it works amazing on all three. Love it for clipping Evernote and sending pages between browsers. Love the ability to change the notebook and tags easily in the browser.

I downloaded Dolphin for the first time and then looked at the functionality in addition to Evernote web clipping. Decided to delete Google chrome as I can’t see anything compeling about it over Dolphin.

I *love* how easy it is to clip and save things to Evernote in #Dolphin! No other browser for iPad (that I’ve found, anyway) makes it that easy. And you can annotate your clipping! This is why #Dolphin is now my go-to iPad browser. The other thing I most love about it is the Speed Dial feature that makes it super easy to go to my most-visited sites, web pages I need at work as well as the fun stuff. The cherry on top is that I have an Android phone, so with #Dolphin both my mobile browsers can talk to each other.

With Evernote as my default note-taking app and using webclipping on my laptop, I was really happy to see the clip to #evernote functionality become available in the latest version of the #Dolphin browser for iPad. Excellent! Helps take Evernote use to the next level and makes clipping practice seamless across devices. I also really like the #Dolphin gesture/symbol based functionality for browsing/navigation. FTW!

I wish I would have known about this a week ago! I was on vacation with just my iPad and would have loved to use the web clipper to save notes to Evernote. Instead I ended up doing round-about techniques, saving to Pocket or my Dropbox until I could get back home to my laptop and save directly to Evernote.#Dolphin